Carlsbad Caverns celebrates 100th year as a National Park with special event

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Massive formations can be found in the Big Room at Carlsbad Caverns National Park.

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Carlsbad Caverns will celebrate 100 years as an official National Park Oct. 25 with special events all day long, such as early access to the parks, coffee with a ranger, cake cutting, a discovery station and a bat watch to end the day, according to a social media post on X, formerly Twitter.

Carlsbad Caverns is an underground cave system of more than 119 caves, which formed when sulfuric acid dissolved limestone, leaving behind the caverns.

The park's website recommends reserving tickets online before arriving at the park.

Tickets are based on a timed entry reservation, the entry fee of $1 per ticket is paid at the visitor center upon arrival.

For information on entrance passes, visit nps.gov/cave/payyourvisit/fees.

Events Schedule Time Event
7:30-8:30 a.m.Wake Up the Cavern: Be one of the first visitors to enter the cavern for the day. Walk a cavern trail with a park ranger as they turn on the lights. Participants must sign up at the information desk in the visitor center the day before.
8 a.m.The Visitor Center opens, and ticket purchases become available.
8:15-9:30 a.m.Coffee with a Ranger: Enjoy coffee and conversations with a park ranger at the Visitor Center front doors.
8:30 a.m.Cavern Access Opens: Self-guided entry via the Natural Entrance or elevator.
9:30 a.m.Centennial Reception: Join National Park Service staff in public recognition of the centennial and community partners in the Visitor Center Theater.
10-11 a.m./12-1 p.m.Where in the World is Carl S. Bat?: Mascot Carl S. Bat has been on a worldwide tour. A park ranger will share Carl's adventures visiting other national parks and World Heritage Sites in the Visitor Center Theater.
10:45 a.m.Cake Cutting: Celebrate the 100th birthday of Carlsbad Caverns National Park by eating cake and cupcakes courtesy of the Western National Park Association in the Visitor Center Theater.
1:00 p.m.Bat Discovery Station Opens: Celebrate Bat Week and learn more about the lives of bats living in Carlsbad Caverns in Theater 2.
2:00 p.m.Descent Through Time: A guided Geology Walk Down the Main Corridor: This two-hour tour led by Ranger Mark takes visitors back to the park's beginning 265 million years ago. This tour is limited to 12 participants. Participants must sign up at the information desk in advance and have an entrance ticket. Meet at the 3-D model in the Exhibit Hall.
2:30 p.m.Cavern access closes
2:45-4:45 p.m.Vertical Caving Demonstrations: Rangers will demonstrate how cavers safely navigate vertical obstacles by ascending and descending a rope in the Exhibit Hall.
4 p.m.Nature Hike: Explore the surface ecosystem with a park ranger on a guided walk of the Chihuahuan Desert Nature Trail. Meet at the 3-D model in the Exhibit Hall.
5 p.m.*Bat Watch: Watch the Brazilian free-tailed bats exit the Natural Entrance of Carlsbad Caverns as they begin their nightly search for food and water. *Bat Watch Program time is subject to change based on previous flight times. Check with the information desk in the Visitor Center for confirmation.

Carlsbad Caverns

Carlsbad Caverns
Slaughter Canyon parking area near the New Cave.
Carlsbad Caverns
Chinese Wall in New Cave
Carlsbad Caverns
Explorer Observes Wonder of New Bifrost Room
Carlsbad Caverns
Park Ranger Bill Van Cott talks to visitors to "New Cave" about the historical background of the area.
Carlsbad Caverns
The Big Room
Carlsbad Caverns
Late 1950s
Carlsbad Caverns
Carlsbad Caverns
The Monarch
Carlsbad Caverns
Visitors on the trail to the new cave.
Carlsbad Caverns
Carlsbad Caverns
The Christmas Tree
Carlsbad Caverns
The Mushroom in the New Cave
Carlsbad Caverns
Visitors at the entrance to the New Cave
Carlsbad Caverns
Totem Pole in the New Cave
One of the rooms in Carlsbad Caverns, lit up for visitors to see the formations.
A pair of visitors gaze at one of nature's sculptures in Carlsbad Caverns National Park over the Labor Day holiday.
-A ranger, cloaked by the dark, shines her flashlight, lower right, onto a boulder, lower left, where bat guano miners scorched it to leave black marks so they could find their way out of Carlsbad Caverns, early last century. The ranger was leading a group of 75 people on the King's Palace guided tour, a one mile tour that travels through four chambers: King's Palace, Papoose Room, Queen's Chamber and Green Lake Room in Carlsbad Caverns.
President Barack Obama and his family toured Carlsbad Caverns on Friday, June 17, 2016. Here, he fists bumps 10-year-old May London in the gift shop before leaving Carlsbad.
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Massive formations can be found in the Big Room at Carlsbad Caverns National Park.
Underground wonders
Susan Bryan Montoya/Associated press The Big Room at Carlsbad Caverns National Park includes a 1 1/4-mile trail that takes about 90 minutes to complete.agomez@abqjournal.comFri Aug 07 13:02:56 -0600 2020 1596826975 FILENAME: 1799874.jpg
Underground wonders
Courtesy of National Park Service The Big Room at Carlsbad Caverns National Park contains various formations like stalagmites and stalactites, columns, flowstone, travertine and cave popcorn. Courtesy National Park Serviceagomez@abqjournal.comFri Aug 07 13:02:56 -0600 2020 1596826975 FILENAME: 1799875.jpg
Underground wonders
Susan Bryan Montoya/Associated press In the COVID-19, the only access to Carlsbad Caverns is via the 1 -mile, winding Natural Entrance Trail.agomez@abqjournal.comFri Aug 07 13:02:57 -0600 2020 1596826975 FILENAME: 1799877.jpg
Underground wonders
Susan Bryan Montoya/Associated press Massive formations can be found in the Big Room at Carlsbad Caverns National Park.agomez@abqjournal.comFri Aug 07 13:02:55 -0600 2020 1596826975 FILENAME: 1799873.jpg
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